B' W! WBW? -$? grj H . ; ;; . 4 m; . ', E r Si rv s V. ;;",v ..i r .-v v A . v pp""! tgtfubltc HcDacr 1,0 LEDCER COMPANY PUBL1 V Irfihi.l . ..... .-- 1'IH'PJltJ1 JU1411 ttO, r BHllPEaT triMn. i.ujininon, vic n irton. Vice I'fmldenti John C. . Beeroierr ua iTceeurnri try end Trceiureri I'hlllp H. Collins. B. Wllllm. John J. Spuwon, KDiTontAb board i Crsts If. K. Ccitu. Chatrmm E..BMILEt..w Editor 'JWTO Tj.1 , , JOHN C. MARTIN,, .doneral Business Meniser Published dully at 1'cplio I.iihixb llulldlnc 1 llluriirilllTIIVV .-".,,., limnuciriii"! b&.. ..... llBa.i ..... Khaallmt Llmta . j! Itcaktio C'lTT rr-lnloii Uutldlns O r Ymz L'OO Metrorollten Tonir nmmv.. ....403 Foril llulldlnc K-WilT. Lotus. ..o .....100S rullerton liulldltin rl'r ciicm.,ihV. isoa Tribune uuiwins H2 ..t-rr-c, until ATTct, 1 . Y?AintvaTAV Tlraickr. BS'a N. 1:. Tor. l'ciinhanU Ave, and 14 th St. NW YOUK DUEiC. Tht Hun llulldlnff IO' joxdov Hemic Marconi Hou. Strand Plana Bcaiiu,,.. 32 Rut Louis le Grand SUBSCRIPTION TERMS The Etisiso PcrLio LiDOta li eened to sub scriber In Philadelphia and aurroundlnc tonne at tha rate of twelve (12) cents per neck, rasablo to tha carrier. .... , Hy mall to point outlde of Phltadrlrhla, In tha United Ftatra, Canada or United Statu po amslona. poatase free, fifty ISOI cent per month. Six (f8l ilollara per er, pable In advance. To all foreleu countries one (Ml dollar per Noti'ct Sutocrlbere Trthlne- edilren changed Btuit Che old an well as new address. BELU M0 WALNTT KEYSTONE. MAIN S000 C Aidreta oil communication to f.'f'Mliff f'ublio Lrrfocr, Independence .Square. i'MtaiielpMa. TATIBtD AT THH mit.iDII.ml4 P0T Otntl 15 SECOND Ctif S Mitt, SUTTSH. rhlUdtlphlt, lurdijr. Mirth 3D. 111 WHAT TO DO WITH THE CLOCK THU daylight-saving law goes Into effect tit 2 o'clock tomorrow morning. At that hour the clocks In all tho railroad stations and tlio watches In the pocckts of till tho railroad men on the trains are to ho set for ward one hour. Householders are expected to tet their clocks ahead an hour when they.eo to hed tonlsht, In order that the' may get up Sunday morning on the new schedule. SerUces in the churches will begin at tho usual hour as indicated by tho clocks, tout the timo will actually be an hour earlier than they began last Sunday. Men will go to business an hour earlier on Mon day morning and schools will open sixty minutes booncr than usual. So remember to set the clock ahead to night and adjust j out self on Sunday to tho new time schedule. T. Jt. hit tho nail on the head when he aid that this Is the people's war. PILING UP THE EVIDENCE NO IXFOIUtnO person ut tho present time doubts that this war was planned by qcrmany for e.trh In adv.inco and that it was Germany which brought It about on tho date when It started. But If any one Is still In uncertainty he should read tho revelations of l'rlnce Llch- . nowsky, lately "made public in Ilerlln and cabled to this country. Tho l'rlnco was the German Ambassador in London In 1914 and had been thero for some tlmo previous. In his notes, mado for tho benefit of his family and not for publica tion, ho wrote that thero was a. chanco for a peaceful settlement of tho differences between Austria-Hungary and Serbia, that Sir Edward Grey worked for that settlc , ment, but that Germany "deliberately de stroyed tho possibility" of sucli an out come. She wanted war becauso Uussla was unprepared. Sho was willing to run thft risk of Rrltiali nctlnn becauso If sho !$ wallet! until 191C. "when war would mfl , tnmA nnvtrnv" Tliissla wnulil ltnvn hcen V...V ....,,....4, .... .- ..... -.. ready. It was necessary to strike while tho chances of victory seemed good. Theso statements support tho evldenco which has been accumulating for tho last threo and a half years that this war Is tho result of a great Gorman plot to con trol tho world. It is medievalism, as l'rlnco Llchnowsky says, and thus is out of placo when tho autocratic theories of princes have given placo to tho principles 'of democracy. It Is an attempt to set back tho clock of time and will fait in theso days when we are setting tho clock ahead that'wc may make better use of tho light of day to keep freedom alive. Victory for Uerger In 'Wisconsin Is to unthinkable that the 'Wisconsin oters aro expected to rnal.e It Impossible nest Tuesdaj . AN OMEN OF GASOLINE ALX. tho rubber-tired world that regards -gasoline as something more important than .food or daylight or virtuo Itself will experience an unpleasant thrill at tho sug gestion of tho president of tho Standard OH Company, who has proposed, with tho na'lvcto peculiar to tho times, that tho Government put up tho prico of crude oil to encourage production. Big business studying at tho feet of farmers Is a new marvel in these mart cl ous days. High prices should bo a logical enough Ionic to the aspirations of wheat growers. But oil doesn't havo to b; planted; it flows from tho ground without hesitation. Doubtless Mr. Bedford 'con siders refinement and transportation and storage and all that sort of tiling under tho general term of production. That cannot be helped. The fact remains that oil is being produced and used In aftt quantities and that the present prices are rather high. Crudo oil as It Is utilized In countless war Industries gives up gasollno as ono of Its most valuablo by-products. Gasoline is said to be accumulating in tast quantities. Can It be that tho oil men are merely making excuses In advance for an upward Jump In the prico of gasoline? ', One of the results of the German drlvo y ie likely" to be the consolidation of the . ft'".NM'.l i a i ml. Intft n olnvl. ,inl. In V.n n..t1 '.'to hammer sense into heads lacking it. &? ' . . ' TiX& "OE AT BUSTLETON V,5STiVROM this distance it is Impossible to if -p perceive the esact nature of tho sinister- Ct ; seems to have upon Bustleton. But that ' the' ell purposes jf the mall authorities , pr deep-rooted and, determined is plainly trident In the announcement that ' Mr. Wrfeson 1 vvllllng to spoil the most 1m 'faksnt experiment' yet planned. in his Nj4rtraent by bringing his air mall ma 'oirte do"vin af .Bustleton and thus throw- rvjpff jwayt' th'e hour which he had saved In Rftny the, new! letter scneauie oeiween ; Tsrlc and Philadelphia. iew time will reveal the reasons .Meanwhile It appears that Bus- . kavliwivolded for e. lfundrod years &V realisation of the dreadful lm- f Hj name, will now Da drawn US aua.'rvnirj oj, niouem ui- ta-thrsat oiuitima aau pre ' &A ovarrua irlthj.vlsl- llM EVENING tAe tenth day AMIENC, tho heart and key of tho present Allied position in France, appears to havo been tho central objective of the German drive. The advance upon Amiens has been stopped. Instead of advancing their activo line at tho mlddte, as they appear to havo Intended, the Germans are now battling furiously at, its ends and floundering upon the edge of n catastrophe that may develop in u few hours with n great counter offensive. The ten days of tho greatest battle of history have been for the Allied com manders the grimmest test of humnn patience ever inflicted upon men. Tho staffs have time nnd again seen tho fate of the world swing upon the decision of a flying minute. Against every tempta tion, sometimes ut appalling risks, they appear to have held all their maj'or re serves behind while the opposing armies beat themselves to denth ngnfnst the re tit ing line. Amiens is a city of about 100,000 popu lation. It might be described loughly at lying nt the intersection of the thiee aims of a letter Y. The line lcpresented by tho base of the letter is an elaborate water and lail tiansport system that runs in almost a straight line to Calais and Boulogne. The flaring arms of tho letter represent a continuation of theso lines which feed the Allied armies over hundreds of miles. An interruption ut Amiens would probably necessitate the immedLito letirement of the French, Ilritish and Amciican aimics from the north of France and Belgium to defensive positions along the "Paris line" of 191 1. The German forces thrust themselves between the two flying arms of the trans poit lines running out from Amiens, but every effort at a decisive advance in that direction was stopped. Their advance lines might now bo illustrated by the diagram of a list, or that of an inflated balloon projecting far forwaid into the Allied position. The French, waiting patiently, attacked experimentally at tho lower angle, whete the German lines leave their old position, and appear to bo feeling their way for u move which shall cut through at the point wheic the lino grew weakest in the outwaid flaie. If anything like pity for a German commander is possible it must be felt now for the man who must attack the British position to the north near Arras. There Marshal Halg has withdrawn his men to the high hills, and the terrain is such that to follow the only course open to them and try to double around tho Biitish the Germans must pass through a veritable inferno, where the ad vantages aro all against them. And yet, tired out at the middle of the line and unaware of what is to happen at either end, the Germans must face it out, con tinue their advance or prepnie for retire ment. Onco again they must take Vimy Ridge or fail. The present advance, thercfoic, is not to be compared to the advance which carried the Germans almost to Paris in 1914, At one point, in the lower salient where tho French aro holding the line, the Germans advanced even further than they did in 1914. but later developments made it appear that they were permitted to move forward for reasons best known to the Allied command. Now the first force of their attack seems to be spent, and they have not advanced a third of the distance which they coveied in the lunge of 1914. They can go little further till the defensive lines are broken. And it is reasonably sure now that tho de fensive lines ate not going to break. Every pronouncement from Allied headquarters, the movement of General Foch, tho most brilliant of the Fiench strategists, to tho first command, make jt appear that new operations on a vast scale are in pieparation against the Ger mans, lo prophesy or guess about such movements is idle. The expected thing docs not happen in military stiategy. The strength of the Allied forces has been revealed now and then, in flashes, whenever the central advance of the Germans seemed to impel il the main lines from Amiens. The decisive action may be amazing when it develops. Tho Germans are weakened, that much is apparent on tho face of the situation. And the Allied reserves aren't. Tho big battle in Ticardy Is likely to make the Kaiser wonder for more than nlno dajs why he did not win THE HOMEWARD SWORD W1 'ILHCLM Or GERMANY" still comfotts himself Willi reiterations of his famil iar proiniso that tho sword shall bring peace. Ho has some Justification for tho belief. Within tho last ten days the Kaiser's bword has brought lasting peace to probably 100,000 German soldiers, who, being dead, aro free forever from tho mul titudinous agonies which this singular monarch has called down upon the heads of his people There can be no finer Induction Into citizenship of the young men who havo becomo of age since tho draft law was passed than registration as cllglbles for military service. INTERNATIONALIZING LABOR THERE has been a conspicuous lack of enthusiasm In American trades union ism for tho program of sublimated Inter nationalism promulgated in London re cently by the Inter-Allied Labor and So cialist Conferenco dominated by Arthur Henderson, of England, and Emtio Vander vclde, of Belgium. The reserve maintained In this country under tho influence of tho American Federation of Labor Is imposed upon the delegation of prominent labor representatives who are about to sta'rt for Europe with the message of American workers to the workers abroad. Organized labor In America has for tho present at least withheld completely Its support from a project for the establish' ment of a labor empire dories. Even the udmlra Mr. Henderson's program di havp atoned In the Americi the radical departures from method suggested elsewhejro 1 era! plan. Advanced and' altogether humane as the general schtme appeared wjen outlined on paper atltliq Jnter-Allled Conference In London, It iievertheleee proposed, a labor Vt WOaF-4 MIPflfcHlflSft Wtz . Tl T anwun- 1VK of HOR:o kPeSoRrvyfor wfiHSfono nfttna gen- LEDGER- ments and rights suggestive of a distinct new nationalism. liven though tho general program of tho conferenco often paralleled tho alms of tho Allied nations in tho war, tho suggestion tcmalned of a new political and economic entity of stupendous lnflucnco and pro portions, Tho general plan was such as to lcavo doubts In such minds as aro oon caned with a program of universal Justlco to tho rich and tho poor alike The conferenco aimed to solidify all labor lnflucnco in aid of a war to tho end. It declared against secret diplomacy, against economic watfnre under any circumstances and for a treaty of peaco i-o drawn as to leave nias opinion cver where dominant beyond doubt. Tho term labor was to defined to lncludo every person who pio duced anything of worth In any foim. In a word, the UnglNh labor leader and his associates aimed to leap nil gups and re organise tho world so that In tho futuro It will bo governed cclulvely by thoio who produce. Tho experiment is in many teipects ex traordinary. It has a romantic appeal And ytt tho aloofness of American labor was Justifiable becauso of the dlsiittlttlng effect that such n program might bo ex pected to hao upon the delicate mid c-traordln-irv processes which mim opeiate after tho war lo icstoro tho life of all na tions to a not mai balance. Tho mes'age to bo carried abroad by (he American labor men and women wilt in form lluropcan labor merely that all tho trndes unionists in this countiy aro united to stand behind America and her Allies to tho successful end of tho war. The solu tion of all attendant problems lias been wiselj left to tho future. War EJidontrs can make a profit of $100 ono. Ono this summer if the clioo'fc. uicoidlni; to tho Department of Agilcultuie. They ai tpoitrd to rhoos-r. SHIPBUILDING AS A SPOU1 "DlwIIIXD tlie runner of Maiathon time - was u heroic urgo that ha' rved to glorify and perpetuate one phaso of Held sports for all time. Aro we le-s Imagina tive than tho ancients" Aro wo to turn a deaf car to the almost but not qulto in articulate spirits of thoso modern cham pions who would give to prowess some thing of its old significance? Somewhero in the deeps of tho Ho Island organization there Is an efficient captain of pilo drivers, who sneered tho other day when ho heard tho boasts of another captain of pllo dilvcrs at tho Newark plant of the Submarine Boat Com pany and promptly turned lo nnd broke all existing woild's iccotds for pllo driving. Then lie challenged Newark. Ho lias had no answer. Xo ono offered a silver cup, though plle-diiving is man's size work, re quiting far more skill, strength and clcvc: ness than tuotball or tennis or towing lit u shell. Now the voice of Captain BUI Barkci I goes up defiantly at the plant of tho New I York Shipbuilding Company at Glouces ter to uecinim tlie achievements or a lltctlng crew that has sent all records for that difficult work sky-high In tatters. Captain Bill' crew v. Ill challenge any crew in an American shipyard. Some urge under the Jackets of riveteis and pllo drivers is making up for such mlstake-j as thero havo been higher up. And jet no ono lias so far recognized the sporting spirit of tho shipbuilders with the formal suggestion of a tournament or tho offer of a cup for the champions! Old gems can bo put to no better usn than tiansforniatlon Into "smokes" for tho soldiers. Tho police aro being kept out nf polities by Fending out a saloon squad to "get" tho men opposed to tho Varcs. Pershing's offer of the entire American army In I-'runcu for tiro on tho threatened front Is not surprising. That Is what tho army is thero for. A student once wrote in an examination papei, "Hrownlns died In 1SS0, the same jear that I was born." It hatdly soems a fair exchange. Government oiders Stop the War for a cessation of municipal contract work will cut JIajor Smith's bond profits'. The agonies of this war aro vndle. TRUTH ABOUT THRIFT WE ARE asked to say something on tho subject of thrift. Very well. If the lady in tho thlid row will remove lur hat wo will begin. We beg your pardon. Madam wo thought It was a hat IT IS gradually getting through to a good many persons that it Is going to tako every kind of effoit on the part of everybody to make the neiessary dent on tho Hohenzol lerns. This nation has got to learn to be thrifty If it takes ten jeais Thrift does not mean stopping all pur chases, forgoing all "luxuries" nnd closing in cry Fliop that does not sell shrapnel. Thrift does not mean a dislocation of all commerco and a devastation of all legitimate recreation. What sort of thrift would it bo that would closo a public library becauso it needed ten tons of coal a month to heat it? What sort of thrift would It be that would deny a woman a spring bonnet If that bonnet would make her a happier and more efficient member of soclctj ? f Applause fioni the third row.) Thrift means tho abolition of waste. (Uneasiness In the third row.) We mean waste: W-A-S-T-li THE FRENCH are tho thriftiest people In the world. They havo borno the greatest agony and strain of the war. nut they havo not shut down their music, their theatres, all the spiritual safety valves that help to foitlfy men's souls. They havo husbanded all their resources, resources of every kind moral, material and spiritual and sharpened them against the enemy. ONE of our own favorite habits has been, when bored, or weary, or not certain Just what to do wjth ourself, to go down to tlie pantry and see what was lying round loose. We lavo decided to abjure that habit Perhaps abjure Is too strong a word. We w 111 modify our habit anyway. Whenever we eat a slice of bread from the bread box we will also eat a slice of some substitute for bread", such as cake. W'e have been trying to cut down ton smoking, too. Several times we have sat In the day coach Instead of In the smoking car, but we always seem to get somewhere near tha flappers from the boarding school out our way, and they do talk such rot about the matinees they have been to that It drives us back to the smoking car, , r THE moral pt It all is, buy war-savings stamps tip to the limit of your proper capacity to absorb them. And today is the last day xou (can, get them for i,tl, Why notjmy. t ta rowh jp,yr- way; tiomtt nd give t taJBrt.irtH. . , .-,..', PUBBIO ir'jfi' Philadelphia; Saturday, march jiv SOCIAL PRATTLE FOR MEN Perry Shallow Reveals Dire Secret, Mr. Albacorc Washes the Dishes. Mr. Adiposes Tractor Boots w rELI my dears, t wonder If you Haw Cliauncey l'ettlbob on Chestnut street tho other day? He was smoking a cigar with a red and gold band, and realty ho looked too sweet to bo human. Tfcoic long pcrfectos suit Cliauncey's Mabi Lino tjpo of features so admirably. Cliauncey's brother Wlnesap, you know, Is the ono who spent seven years nt Hatvard without getting a degree. They t,iy that Cliauncey's grandfather used up all tho brains In the family. Wo shall havo to wait another generation for some moro to accumlatc. It's a long tlmo to wait. PROCESSOR MANDRAKE, out In Verbena College (ou know b married Amaryllis Ankle, and they had seven sons all with hare lip It Is never mentioned, my dears, no don't tepeat It) has tlie most charming hublt. He always carries a Latin ulctlonary with him, nnd If any one uses a word of Latin origin In conversation, oh all of us must sometimes even without meaning to, the profcsor Insists on explaining the hapltss word's true and etymological meaning That sort of thing Is so Instructive, oon t you think? Ot course It s embarrassing nt times, becauso many of us havo forgotten our Latin, We've known men to drive In town In their motors Just to avoid I inciting tho professor on tho train, but that seems rather cowaidlj. rplIE smoking car Is the Jolllcst placo to i L pick up trifles of conversation. Of course j we don't bello,vo In gossip, but Innocent com- I ment on one's fellow men is bo exhilarating don't you think? Mr. Henry Longboncs wa i on the train comlrg In from Marathon (be l looked very rmart In his new cutaway and ' leopard skin waistcoat) when wo heard him say: "Why on earth does Barbecue wear those shell goggles? They make him look Just like a chimpanzee " Ho was referring to Ted Bar- i becue, and every one doei know that Ted's features ore well, rather prognathous and I simian. (You remember, my dears, that Mrs Uarlecue was a De CJnlncr, and when they j wcio ergaged her father, old Judge Dd yulncey, always used lo refer to his prospec tive son-in-law as "That joung prehensile."' lie had a rather caustic tongue, the old Jurist, and w-as famous for his amethst cuff but ton). Well, mv dears, wo aro wandering. What we Btarted to say was this: Wo told Ted Barbecue wli.it Henry Longboncs had bald. and to our chagrin he was much annoyed. Of course, we thought the Joko was such an old one that he wasn't sensitive about it, and Intimated as much, but he uttered an oath jes, my dearp, an oath and went off very angry. And now wo are much put out, be causo wo do hato a mischief maker, don't you? Or COURSE In these scrvantless tlajs many of the vei- nicest people are doing their own kitchen chores, but it was rather a. surprise to us to team that the custom had spread as far as Caiaway r.irk. which after all Is ono of our very most exclusive suburb". But over a cigar at tho Hotel Hat Ransom Jerry Thlmbletrot told us that Mr. Albemarle Atbacore, tlie prerident of the Uen ;:lue National Bank, aluavs washes tho dishes after dinner ut his magnificent Louis Vlngt-ct-Un mansion In Caraway 1'ark. Mrs. Alba- core, jou know. Is tremendously Interested In Russian liteiature, and sho Just has to have the hour after dinner free for reading Trot sky and sorno of the other Slav novelists; and so Albemailc Jut whirls in and does the dishwashing. I think It's v'ery noblo of him. He told Jerry that sometimes, when tho dishes ale greasy. It's rather a bore, but ho Just fixes his mind firmly on Mr. McAdoo and the third Liberty Loan, and that helps him through. We all have to do our bit as best wo can. SPEAKING of the Albaeores still, Jerry says they were fearfully sold over tho "Minia ture In Yellow" bv Whistler that Mr. Albacore bought at a picture auction In New York. You know Mr. Albaroio fancies himself a good deal as a collector, and was very proud of having picked up a Whistler rarity that no one had ever heard of before. But the old gentleman Is very short-slgh'ted. as every ono knows, and It seems that on tha day he bought this "Miniature In Yellow" he had left his glasrcs at home. When he got the treasure back to Ills gallery, and Mrs. Alba core looked at it. they found It was a twenty dollar bill that had been beautifully framed. And ho paid $3000 for It It docs seem as though a banker ought to havo recognized tho hoax-, but they do sav that Mr. Alba core is so accustomed to tho bills of larger denomination that ho hardly knows what the smaller ones look like. It may all bo a twit, but that's what Jerry toM me. But Jerry Thlmbletrot himself may havo trouble with his ejes. We were sitting at the Hat-Ransom, spoofing each other over a glass of beer, and the waiter laid the check on the table In plain view. Jerry didn't reem to sc It at all, even when with a dexterous motion we pushed it right under his face. In the end we had to pay It out self. TIILY told us in tho club the other day that old Mr. Convex Adlposo bad to get a, special permit from the United States cloth administration to have his new overcoat made. You see, my dears, the Government needs all tho cloth In the country for uni forms, and dear Mr, Adipose uses so much at a time that thero is a teal danger of short age. Not even tho satisfaction of seeing him on Chestnut street In Ills new surtout would compensate us If the boys In Franco had to do without, do you think? Mr. Adi pose has a new Idea In footwear. He has all his boots mado with the caterpillar tread, Just like a tractor. He says it helps him to get around. VERCY SHALLOW. (tf fiesfl authofttattve comments en ?nacuW! roctrtv meet tle airoi'al of our readers wc tkhall le vlad to open our columns to JLTr. Bnallovi from time to time. Ldltor, i;lmm 1'vm.iy Llsjeb.) We appreciate the ItencJerJnc klndllnoss of our cor- Unto Caeur respondent who com pliments us on having dubbed the Kaiser "William the Damned" In a recent editorial on this page ; but credit for having originated the phrase should bo given, wo believe, to Colonel George Harvey, It's a good one. "Think of the flerco Ills h energy concentrated in ;. -plosives an acorn," cries Hor- nard Shaw. "You bury it In the ground, and It explodes Into a giant oak." We. aro glad Mr. Shaw did not per versely omit the a from accrn. In the super cgetarianlsm, the bunion may be almost as grievous as the onion. Paradise Deprecated When tho faucets all stop dripping Ami the bathtub never leaks; When the house has weatherstrlpping Against the blizzard weeks; When the piping never freozes And plumbers cease to plumb, When every prospect pleases And we clean by vacuum When wallpaper never blisters And plaster docs not fall, When larcenous laundry sisters Plunder us not at all; , When kitchen maids don't mutter Anil tablecloths show no stain, And husbands never utter A single, word profane When the rugs are never faded And eggs go down in price; When pantries are not raided By children or by mice Then wives wlU never be weary, Commuters will all grow fat: But. heavens 1 Ufwou(d be dreary A " KAISER REVISES A Personal Interview With an Eminent Reviewer From Our Special I Correspondent at the Rear I LEFT the battlefield early In the morning, and, traveling four hours In a swift motor car In tho direction of least resistance, ar rived at the barred zone occupied by tho Kaiser. It was a matter ot some dllTlculty to gain access to this area, as an hour be fore one of tho imperial dachshunds had ex pired of a plethora of (deleted by censor), but, on showing my credentials as a book reviewer, 1 was admitted. Some 5 earn ago I wrote a very glowing review of tho Kaisers book of verses, and consequently 1 am persona gratlsslma. I found the Emperor In his pavilion, toying Willi a volume of Walt Mason's poems. I think this was merely a pose, however, as underneath tho tablo I noticed a Baedeker of St. Helena, evidently thrust thero hur riedly. I think tho All-Highest was making up his mind to take a Uttlo sight-seeing tour after tho outbreak of peace. However, that Is besldj tho point. -tTOUR MAJESTY," I said, "my paper JL has sent me here to get jou to do for us a. review- of Mr. Gerard's famous book, "My I'our Years In Germany," "Was It only four jears?' he said dole fully. "It Ecemed much longer." I waited a moment, not wishing to Intrude upon painful momorles. "Your Majesty has read tho volume?" I asked. His mustache flashed nnd his ejes bristled. "I have," ho said. "And as a con noisseur of literature. I must tell jou fmnitiv that Mr. Gerard Is no stylist. Even coming to me purgod by several translations, I must confess that tho author's treatment of hlB subject Is sadly amateurish. Tho edition I read bad been translated from tho American Into Danish, thence Into Japanese, then Into Hindustani, and from that Into Bolshevik and Turkish. The German edition came from tho Turkish. Even with all thoso chances for Improvement I must say that I was distressed by the lack of beauty of Mr. Gerard's phrasing. I cannot permit tho literary taste of my people to be stultified bv such wi etched writing. I havo had tho German edition suppressed, and am rew rlting it myself. That may seem arbitrary, but my deep reverence for culturo Insists that the German people descrvo only tho best." "But, jour Majesty," I demurred, "Even granting that Mr. Gerard is no stylist, surely tho question Is whether he tells tho truth V The Emperor's fist pounded the table. "Who is the book reviewer here, yod or I?' he snapped. I acknowledged my Indiscretion 1TR- GERARD was a very troublesome 1V.JL fellow," said tho Imperial book re viewer. "I cannot persuade myself that he Is a man of any breeding. Surely It Is the height of bad taste to render oneself so obnoxious to one's hosts? He kept Berlin In an uproar continually, Ho was always casting doubt, upon our treatment of prisoners of war. He crjtlcized our statu ary. When I took Irlm out to shoot ho bagged moro game than I did. I cannot permit gross breaches of etlquetto like that. A very great rtsponsiDimy nas ueeu ueie gated to me by un extremely high authority. When "matters of culture and. Intellect are In question, upstarts and counlerjumpers must be eliminated. They have no right to express an opinion. I am sorry, but it is my decliton that Gerard's book is a wantonly bad book. Until It has been rewritten I cannot give you a favorable review. I think I had better write a book of ttty own called 'My Four Years With Mr. Gerard." perhaps your paper would like to mako me an oiler for the transatlantic rights?" I told him that we would pay nt least (deleted by the censor) for such a volume. "You are sure It was only four years?" he said thoughtfully. "It seems .to me as though I had known that man all my life. Sometimes ' I have nightmares about him. He was Impossible 1 YOU would hardly be hove the monstrous things he did. In the first place, he was totally lacking In humor, when I wrote that memorandum to the President In August, ).9H, he pok It serl 'WtiXi 4l aye ll t0 him '.because., I. thought iik a.seuyenv wmfwow jMflUaa iois BOUGHT AND PAID FOR GERARD'S BOOK that was an ntroclous thing to do. And he docs not realize the first principles of diplo matic etiquette. When a statement Is 10 pudlatcd, that Is all thero Is to It. AH my friends understand that. But this Gerald why ho did not even wear a uniform. Think of the humiliation Involved for me; nu ambassador coming to call on me dressed llko a waiter." I ADMITTED that this was n serious thing. "The book has been put in tho movies jour Majesty," I said. "You will bo pleased to hear. Sire, that you ourself play a very leading rolo iu the film, and ono of tho most competent actors in Ameiica has been can to Impersonate jou" To my surprlso ho was very angry. "Why didn't tlicy let mo know?" he cried. "Another breach of courtesy! Really you Americans aro Intolerable. Kindly cable nt onco and havo tho plcturo withdrawn until I can get over to take tho part mj-self. You should havo known that rather than havo any canalllo represent mo I would havo come across peisotmlly to act the pait. I nm ex ceedingly Interested In tho movies, and selzo every opportunity to get Into them. If necesury I will sign an- armistice until tho matter has been successfully attended to. What Is tho name of tho actor who takes my part? Has ho a fine physical presence" It Is gross presumption on his part to thrust himself forward In that way. Of courso he Is totally inadequato to tho role." I agreed that this was probably true. it ANOTHER thing." he said, "I have xi-not been approached on tho subject of roj-altles. Certainly I shall have to bo com pensated fur my part In the film: Will you please tako up tho matter with the proper parties? I am not unreasonable. I am will ing to consider a fair offer." "But, jour Majestj-," I said, "my paper pent mo hero at enormous expense to secure from j-ou a review of Mr. Gerard's book. Am I to understand that jou condemn it In toto? This wilt bo a serious blow to tho American people. And It may undermine Mr. Gerard's health and seriously weaken him at n tlmo when ho needs nil his endur ance. Ho Is doing a great deal of publlo speaking, and that Is very taxing, as j-ou know." "Pooh," he said. "I enn speak all day long without fatlguo. As for tho review, jou will have to wait until tho book has been rewritten. In tho revised version. I douht If Sir. Gerard's name will oven bo Mentioned. And now you will havo to excust. me, I have to give Ludcndorff a llttlo coaching In stratcgj'. Poor Ludj', ho is such .i good fellow, but he leans on mo drcadfullj-," I WAS just leaving, when he called me back. "Perhaps ' I have been a little severe." he said. "Of courso, jou have not much literature In America, and I don't want to bo too severe on Mr, Gerard for the primi tive uncouth ness of his style. When j-ou see him Just assure him that' fitter I havo polished It up a bit It will be all right. The next time he gets out a book he had better let me look over the proofs beforehand. And, of course, jou have sorno very prom ising writers in America, alve my compli ments to that fellow Nearlng." Hog Island appears lint Tliere It to bo rapidly living Lots of Rooting down the horrid sue- gstlun ot its naino which recently was so general. Tlie priority of ma. 1'Uee ux terials board has de- llnfentt elded that manufac turing of baby car riages Is not a "nonessential Industry." Just so they don't call them perambulators! OBITS WE COVET 1IKBN8T0RK1' When. tKm.torir died And went below Hell nun out signboards. And Htn. Irk of derail) inlet, i ' , k .. ?.. KSUKl'' " S't - a .,"". . . ,,- A ,jc WHAT R. h. S. SAW AT NOYON - mW'O j oung men once trav eled bj canoedowf -- mo ffaniDre nun ino ense, iigiu-nearm enough, Jesting with lovo and death. LlrlM did they think that forty jears later thd sweet and quiet country would bo the an of tho world's greatest death struggle." thought of war, to bo sure, for a red had swept through the land not many ytii befoio their paddles flashed In those brig waters. But not In their wildest momeW did they dream of what tho future heldia Ihe two joung men were Koueri uw Stevenson and his friend fair Walter Simp tho book In which tliey told their idw turo was "Tho Inland VoaE0." Anew teems ono of tho Ironies of fate that tl)ftfjl fascinating chronicle. should become f or tlffl moment the authoritative textbook orUtbJ legion of carnage. Nono of the war con Fpondcnts tell us as much of the countrj where Destlnv haims In tho balance as wi can learn from tho boyish log-book ell R. L. S. ffV It was at Orlunv. not far from St Quenlirl fwheio the Geimnn general staff Is quartMeli nt present), that Stevenson and Simpson ibk tho three younc ladles to charm!nhf W scribed as "the graces ot Origity." It vrii t? La l'erc "La Fere ot cursed memory"-; that they wero turned out of an Inn. Ana I was at Noj-on, now the storm center oi southern wing of the German inrusi, y R. L. S. fell in lovo with tho cathedrsl. ever I Join tho Church of Rome," he cfl nt .i.ii .nni.t. ,n h. hl.hnn of AM .1.- M. '"T KlpviM-innn-n rliqr-rlnt!nn of NoVOn CIUIW .i ... .I.. i , fl,irlv thfc f inuiies onu piny liiuv .fc iiij -. - - and the earthquako that rago about ttVJi navo beiuoin louiteu. 11c niuco, .. .nri nt n i-imrnh eiiih more complet i n.itiiv. As it nances out in three vridt races and settles down broadly on catth It looks like tho poop of some .m old battleship. Hollow-backed buttr carry vases, which usum u, ...v -.-. -,-. r i .. wii it, tim trround. 1 iC'ruB. iiieic i-s v .v.. - . i tho towers Just appear above the Pjj the roof, as though tno gooa soip "" TJ lng lazily, over an Atlantic swell. Aijj moment It migni do u uu'S" .H ...,. .... .linihtntr tlm next blllOVV. Al.1 - .. i.wIa... ,iAli-lit nne.n and son admiral thrust forth n cocked hat Ml .1 rt iel-n tin nhRrV.ltlOn. .THO Old J v-Ctltl iw imw ut - -- - . inirnia trill thn sea no longer, tn 010 i..n. - nii ivmion nn and llV6 OH pictures; hut this, that was a chywpg t.- -- l.rti.frKt tmnn. is still a CW and makes as bravo an appearance .oy Ono prays that It may st be a churc I outrldo the sea of bloody aeain n -- as tho oiu vessel 10 which pared.lt. QUIZ 2. vi,t Interest will the third U""Kl 'ear? , . Afjl X Mho wrote "Sartor He.arlu. 'f 3 4' "Ya'an'a'lncV br the 1-n.lUH fMf 5. Identify "Hie Knee of Montleello. 0. Mint It tsploea? CJ - ..l- ,.. li-WI-l. nmlitl.3d0r 10 IB T. ,, vvnn ii ij,m m-.- .rial States? , Mj 8. Where la Albert? jM 10, wi,lh American cltr, l i"' '"? .-M Answers to Yesterdays MUWS . . -....,. .... r i.nlnr t) WW"" -. ! ' V"".'iV::"in i Fh llol.hen w , Ef'&ASSff&JJi 111 reiroKmu. .. Admiral ..on Tirol" '''""V," " " , ""7.S '"..i.V.-.rfr, KnlrLerbofUeri referrlns tooJ i"Kl lifli'ii lllex In .N" York, rrom '.",. i 1L..1,.... lllktary of VT or. if Xr- I!-.mV Cathedral of A nr.. Trwl H the o!el W!3. "-- --.-' .1,. tifift or tBM'""" , cUmmYl'teeoiVpuKil. "'""h'W"( Th. Julian calendar. f." .?0.!.I ..w J;"w,""":.4v;;.i,i." .i .trT.firciorrlnlW Tim Merer Icltcn u ttiti ?W Meld, In the mropaUn of "',,.: A'liifl dl. of the ! ;'f,BiaSe'l Ml 1 I 11 ' '. ' r . . ' . A ' ." AJ , rl j r-. ii